© 1997,
1998 Streamline Publications
Just a darn minute! Didnt you say (in
Calleguas Creek: Regional Watershed Plan) that Calleguas
Creek is dumping a surfeit of sediment, silting up Mugu Lagoon? So how
can this coastal salt marsh be eroding?
It is true that this habitat of some 40 threatened and endangered
species on Ventura Countys southern coastal tip is becoming
smaller. While erosion of the Calleguas Creek watershed has increased
over the years, filling in tidal wetlands, the ocean is carving away
at the lagoon itself. The apparent dichotomy results from Nature
asserting her complete disregard for human plans and sensibilities.
Point Mugu, and the Navy base at waters edge, is the site of an
erosive battle of the elementsthe Mugu Submarine Canyon and
Calleguas Creek.
The Gaping
Maw
The submarine canyon, which is 350 feet deep and begins only a few
yards from the shore, swallows thousands of cubic yards of soil each
yearincreasing dramatically during periods of heavy weather. The
precipitous drop of canyon walls to such a depth, and the eleven-mile
length of the canyon, cause the resultant outflow of sediment to be
carried far out to sea. The Pacifics ceaseless nibbling at the
shoreline cannot be stopped or slowed by human effort.
Much of the sediment deposited by the creek at its mouth is swept
away by the intruding ocean. Where sediment builds up along this front
it creates a shelf of loosely aggregated rock, dirt and sand which
will eventually sluff off into the canyon. When it does, its scouring
action takes some of the underlying soil with it. The combination of
these erosive effects creates the phenomena of a salt marsh silting upbecoming
dry landwhile at the same time on the opposite side of the shore
margin there is deep sea.
Live With It
What can man do? First is to get out of the way. The Navy base has
lost land and has had to surrender buildings and facilities to the
encroaching ocean. The second is to accept that nothing can be done,
that even without the watersheds sediment buildup over decades
and centuries, ocean action will continue to undercut the shoreline.
In a natural ecosystem, such as Mugu Lagoon, there will be changes
affecting plants and animals that now inhabit and visit this salt
marsh. According to Navy ecologist Tom Keeney, who monitors the
lagoon, the plants and animals will likely have an easier time
adjusting to these changes than will humans who may be emotionally
invested. He cites migrating shorebirds that have learned to deal with
such events. Keeney believes that while parts of the lagoon will be
lost, most of the marshes will survive. The submarine canyon is
currently moving northward but scientists are unsure whether it will
continue or change direction.
While normal erosion advances at about two feet a year, storm surges
increase that amount; the recent El Niño claimed 30 feet. Far
from being a tragedy, the canyons progress is a natural and
dynamic geologic process, creating and destroying according to Natures
functions.
A greater concern for the lagoon involves what the sediment
brings in the way of pollutants and how the oceans action may
affect their release.
Please turn to Waterborne
Pollution for more on pollution affecting Calleguas Creek
and Mugu Lagoon and whats being done about it.
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plants and politics.
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